The Georgian Archive, on loan for thirty years beginning in 1974
to the Harvard College Library from the Georgian government in exile, was
returned to Tbilisi in October 1997. The archive was filmed in 1978.

Records reflect the activities of
the government of the independent Georgian Republic and the Georgian
government in exile after the occupation. Includes minutes, correspondence,
reports, and other materials of peace delegations and special committees
concerning the Russian Revolution and the situation in the Caucasus prior to the
Bolshevik invasion and the declaration of independence of the Georgian Republic.
The activities of various ministries of the government are documented by
correspondence, minutes, memoranda, statistical data, reports, and other official
documents such as decrees, constitution, petitions, and orders. Subjects covered
are foreign affairs, finance, trade, industry, agriculture, and military affairs
(People's Guard). Also material, mostly diplomatic correspondence, pertaining to
peace negotiations and relations with European countries, Turkey, Soviet Russia,
and other Russian republics, including activities of Georgian delegation to the
Peace Conference in Paris (1918-1923) and other diplomatic missions in Europe.

Archives created by the Georgian government in exile in Paris contain
correspondence, official declarations, financial records, memoranda, minutes of
meetings, reports, speeches, and articles. These materials document the
government's relations with the League of Nations, the U.S., European political
parties, and underground groups in occupied Georgia. Records of the government
in exile include account books from 1920 to 1938; and correspondence and
manuscripts of speeches and articles of Noe Jordania, Georgian president in exile,
Nicholas Tcheidze, and other government figures. Also booklets and
miscellaneous printed material, 1918-1957; about the Georgian Republic.

9. Report by General
Odishelidze to the Commander-in-Chief in Caucasus and
investigation of incidents in the territories left by the Russian Army. 2.6.1918 -
5.8.1918 Vehib Pasha, General Odishelidze, General G. Gerasimoff

4. Quarrels about the district of Sochi
among the Georgian, Bolshevik, and Denikin armies. Intervention of the English
Military Command. 9.3.1918 - 6.30.1919 O. Wardrop, General Corey, E.
Gueguechkori, General G. Forestier-Walker, General Denikin

7. Decision of the population of Sochi
to join Georgia. Fight against Bolshevik army. Negotiations with representatives
of the White Army in two exemplars. 9.18.1918 - 5.1.1919 E.
Gueguechkori, General Alexeieff, General Denikin, General Tomson, N. Jordania

8. Meeting and debate between the
representatives of Georgia and the Russian White Army. 9.18.1918 - 10.23.1919 N. Jordania, E. Gueguechkori, N. Ramishvili, General
Alexeieff, Gerneral Denikin, General Tomson, General F. Walker, General Briggs, General
Beach

9. Conference of the rperesentatives
of the Russian White Army and the Georgian Republic. 9.25.1918 - 2.5.1919 E. Gueguechkori, General Alexeieff, General Denikin, Bytch.

14. Correspondence with the British
Military Command about the actions of the Russian White Army and the situation
of Batumi, Ardagani, Akhalkalaki, and Akhaltsikhe. 11.17.1918 - 5.23.1919 E. Gueguechkori, General Alexeieff, General Denikin, General Briggs, General Beach, Colonel Haskell, Lloyd George

15. Diplomatic correspondence with
the British Military Command about General Denikin's demands. Activity of the Georgian Delegation before the Peace
Conference. 12.7.1918 - 6.21.1920 E. Gueguechkori, N. Tcheidze, General
Corey, Bytch.

17. Tension between the White Army
and Georgian troops. Telegram by the Georgian government to Lloyd George. 12.16.1918 - 1.31.1919 Lloyd George, E. Gueguechkori, General G.
Forestier-Walker, General Briggs, General Denikin, General Milne.

21. Georgian Delegetion to the Peace
Conference. Concession to Armenia for construction of a railway line through
Georgia to Batumi. 12.30.1918 - 1.10.1920 N. Tcheidze, E. Gueguechkori, General Milne, N. Ramishvili.

22. Correspondence with Armenia
and the Allied Forces about consequences of the war. 1.2.1919 - 9.13.1919 E. Gueguechkori

26. Minutes of the Armeno-Georgian
Conference with participation of the British representative. 1.16.1919 - 9.13.1920
N. Ramishvili, E. Gueguechkori, S. Arutunian, St.
Mamikonian

27. Armeno-Georgian Conference.
1.17.1919 - 9.17.1919

28. Correspondence of the Georgian
government with the British Military Command concerning the situation in
Batumi and Artvin. 1.25.1919 - 9.11.1919 General
Forestier-Walker, E. Gueguechkori

29. Policy of the English Military
Command in Georgia. 1.27.1919 - 5.6.1919 E. Gueguechkori, Colonel White, General
Forestier-Walker, General Denikin, General V.C. Cooke-Collis

30. Relations between the Russian
White Army and Georgia. 1.29.1919 - 2.10.1919 E. Gueguechkori, General Denikin

31. Correspondence with the British
Military Command in Transcaucasia about the occupation of neutral territories by
the White Army. 1.31.1919 - 9.19.1919 E. Gueguechkori, General Forestier-Walker, General Tomson, General Milne

32. Correspondence of the Georgian
Foreign Ministry with the Georgian Representative in Azerbaidjan. 2.2.1919 -
3.24.1919 E. Gueguechkori, General
Forestier-Walker

33. Georgian soldiers and officers in
the French army request repatriation of the Georgian Delegation at the Paris
Conference. 2.12.1919 - 5.1.1919

41. Territory, trade, and industry of
Georgia. Memorandum by the President of Georgia to the representatives of
England, France, the United States of America, and Italy. 5.1.1919 - 12.9.1920 N. Jordania, E. Gueguechkori, N. Ramishvili, General
Briggs, General Beach, Lord Curzon, G. Tchicherin, S. Kiroff, Talaat Pasha

42. Correspondence with the British
Military Command about the Georgian port of Batumi. 5.3.1919 - 12.27.1919 E. Gueguechkori

43. Correspondence with the British
Military Command. 5.6.1919 - 8.1.1919 E. Gueguechkori, General Tomson, General Braugh

46. Discussions between the British
Military Command and the Georgian government about the activity of the White
Army. 5.23.1919 - 9.6.1919 E. Gueguechkori, N. Ramishvili, General Briggs, General Beach, General
Forestier-Walker, General Denikin, N. Jordania, General Corey

47. Meeting betweem the President of
Georgia and representatives of the British Military Command about Denikin's demands in three exemplars. 5.23.1919 - 5.24.1919 N. Jordania, General Beach, E. Gueguechkori, N.
Ramishvili, General Briggs.

51. Correspondence with the British
Military Command about the borders between White Russian and Georgian
armies. 6.28.1919 - 4.23.1920 E. Gueguechkori, General Tomson, General Denikin, O. Wardrop, Lloyd
George

52. Petitions of the inhabitants of
Artvin asking to be joined to Georgia. 6.29.1919 - 11.28.1919 General Corey

53. Correspondence with
representatives of the Allied Forces about actions of Denikin's army in Caucasus and incidents in Moslem Georgia. 7.11.1919 -
December 1919 E. Gueguechkori, O.
Wardrop, General Corey, General Forestier-Walker.

Reel 75

54. Correspondence with the British
Military Command about the problem of Batumi. 7.22.1919 - 11.5.1919 E. Gueguechkori

55. Correspondence with the British
Military Command about the activity of Russian bolshevik agents in Georgia.
6.26.1919 - 11.19.1920 N. Ramishvili, General Beach

56. Historical review of the past and
present life of the Georgian nation. July - August 1919

57. Material concerning
administration of the oil companies by the British Military Command. 8.28.1919 -
May 1920 General Luke.

60. Meeting among the
representatives of the British Military Command, Armenia, and Georgia about
evacuation of the Borchalo neutral zone. 8.31.1919 - 9.31.1919 M.
Mamikonian, K. Sabakhtarishvili, General Beach

61. Correspondence with the British
Mission. Arrival of General Baratoff. Convention between Armenia and Georgia
about extradition. August 1919 - 4.23.1920 E. Gueguechkori, N. Jordania, N.
Ramishvili, General Denikin

71. Warning of Allied Forces by
Georgia about certain military alliance of the Turks and Bolsheviks in the future.
Appeal to raise a blockade of Georgia and sell her arms and provisions. 1.10.1920
- 2.3.1921 E. Gueguechkori, O.
Wardrop, Commandant de Nonancourt.

Reel 77

72. De facto recognition of Georgia
by the Grande Entente. The question of Batumi. January 1920 - 6.11.1920 E. Gueguechkori, O. Wardrop, General Milne, Commandant de Nonancourt, General Cooke-Collis

82. Text of agreement granting
Armenia the right to construct a railway line from the Armenian frontier along the
Tchorokhi River valley with an outlet on the Black Sea. 6.20.1920 - 11.20.1920 E. Gueguechkori, N. Ramishvili, N.C. Luke, Lieutenant
Colonel S.B. Stokes

10. Borders of Georgia. Appeal to the
Committee of the Socialist International Conference. Memorandum by the Georgian Delegation to the Peace Conference.
1.28.1919 - July 1919

11. Diplomatic correspondence of the
Georgian Delegation with the representatives of various countries in Paris.
Historical review of the population, territory and natural resources of Georgia.
2.6.1919 - 3.14.1919 S. Pichon, N.
Tcheidze, Albert Thomas, General Harbord

41. Blockade of Georgia from
1918-1920 by the Russian White Army and British Navy. Protest of the Georgian
Delegation about General Denikin's actions before
the Peace Conference. 5.23.1919 - 6.14.1919 N. Tcheidze, I. Tsereteli, E.
Gueguechkori, N. Ramishvili, General Briggs, General Beach, General Milne, General
Alexeeff, General Denikin

47. Georgia faces danger of invasion
from the north by the Bolshevik Army and from the south by the Turkish Army.
France and England are asked to sell Georgia necessary arms. 6.21.1919 -
7.2.1920 N. Tcheidze

57. Material concerning the
participation of the Georgian delegate in the International Congress of cooperative
organizations. 8.21.1919 - 9.15.1919 N. Tcheidze

58. Joint petition of the Armenian,
Georgian, and Azerbaidjan delegations to the Supreme Council of the Peace
Conference to postpone evacuation of the Allied Forces from the Caucasus until
their de jure recognition. 8.23.1919 - 8.28.1919 Georges
Clemenceau

63. Georgian Delegation to the Peace
Conference. Georgian Information Bureau and its relation to similar organizations
located in France. News about conclusion of a treaty with the R.S.F.S.R.
9.11.1919 - 10.14.1920 E. Gueguechkori, General Milne, General Cooke Collis, N. Jordania, I. Tsereteli, Gr. Rtskhiladze

64. Correspondence of the Georgian
Delegation with various European countries about repatriation of Georgian
soldiers. 9.30.1919 - 10.24.1919 André Lefevre

68. Efforts to become a member of the
League of Nations. Negotations with Italy concerning the purchase of necessary
arms. 10.6.1919 - 5.21.1920 N. Tcheidze, K. Gvardjaladze, Vl. Voytinski

69. Necessary parts for the streetcar
system sent by the Georgian Delegation to Tbilisi. 10.7.1919 N.
Tcheidze, Colonel Haskell

70. Order of the British Military
Command to evacuate immediately from the district of Batumi. Monopoly of the
manganese industry. 10.15.1919 - 3.29.1920 E. Gueguechkori, General Milne, General
Cooke Collis, N. Tcheidze, I. Tsereteli

96. Correspondence of the Georgian
Delegation. Orders of the French Government to sell arms and ammunition to
Georgia. 2.25.1920 - 10.26.1920 N. Tcheidze, General Foch, S. Petlura, Eric Drummond, C.
Huysmans

97. Evacuation of the port of Batumi
by English troops. Notification of the Georgian Government to reoccupy the city.
2.26.1920 - 8.10.1920 N. Tcheidze, Lord Curzon, A. Toptchibasheff, J. Gobechia, Gr. Rtskhiladze

132. Correspondence of the Georgian
representatives abroad with Georgian and European governments. Draft of
agreement concerning Batumi and railway from Armenia to the port. 9.25.1920 -
11.26.1920 Georges Leygues, E.
Gueguechkori

4. Resolution taken by the Georgian
military not to participate in the Russian Civil War. Directives given by the
Georgian Foreign Ministry to diplomats from Ukraine and other countries.
8.23.1918 - 1.13.1919

18. Correspondence between
Georgian Government and the Diplomatic Representation of the R.S.F.S.R.
6.23.1920-11.11.1920 K. Sabakhtarishvili

19. Joined sitting of the mixed
Russian-Georgian commission about military guarantees. 6.26.1920-7.24.1920 S. Mdivani, L. Ruser

20. Acts of hostility from the side of
British Command blowing up the Batumi fortresses before departure of the British
troops. Mutual recrimination of the Representation of R.S.F.S.R. and Georgian
Government. 6.30.1920-11.18.1920 E. Gueguechkori, S. Kiroff, P.
Tchichinadze, S. Mdivani

23. Again about the Russian-Georgian
mixed commission of the military guarantees. Delivery of Batumi and its district
to the Georgia by the British Command 7.9.1920-8.10.1920 S.
Mdivani, K. Sabakhtarishvili, Gen. Zakhariadze, E. Gueguechkori

20. Appeal to the Supreme Council by
the Caucasian governments in exile to include their countries in European
economic relief as entities distinct from Russia. 12.30.1921 - December 1922 N. Jordania, Bonomi, A. Tchenkeli, L. Barthou, E. Gueguechkori, G.
Tchicherin, R. Poincaré

27. French Committee
of the Black and Caspian Seas. Appeals of the Russian national
organizations to the peoples, their governments, the Pope, and all religious
associations. 1.10.1922 - 12.3.1922 A. Tchenkeli, A. Guchkoff, G. Alexinski, E. Gueguechkori

35. Protest by Union of Teachers and
Union of Students against Russian occupation of Georgia sent to the free world by
Georgian Socialist-Revolutionary Party. 3.11.1922 - 3.20.1922 A.
Mdivani, G. Tchicherin

8. Georgian Legation and Political
Commission in Constantinople in possession of report about economic situation in
occupied Georgia given by the bolshevik commissar of finance to the Communist Central Committee in Tbilisi.
11.22.1921 A. Svanidze

23. Information from Georgia about
ousting of so-called Georgian communist "uklonists" from government and rise to
power of Beria. Efforts to create united organization from representatives of all
Caucasian republics. 3.30.1925 - 9.18.1933 N. Jordania, S. Mdivani

10. Report of the Political
Commission about its activity to the exiled President of Georgia. Information
from Georgia about the situation in the country. 10.1.1922-3.28.1923 N. Jordania, K. Gvardjaladze, A. Tchenkeli, I.
Tsereteli, N. Nikoladze, N. Khomeriki

11. Correspondence of the Georgian
Political Commission in Constantinople with the underground anti-Russian
organization in Georgia. Appeal to League of Nations by united democratic
parties in Georgia. Cipher letters. 10.18.1922-6.12.1925

21. Information from Georgia about
ousting of so-called Georgian communist "uklonists" from government and rise to
power of Lavrenti Beria. Efforts to create united organization from
representatives of all Caucasian republics. 3.30.1925-9.18.1933 N.
Jordania, S. Mdivani

7. All the European socialists take the
side of occupied Georgia. European socialists elect delegates for the mixed
commission in order to conduct referendum in Georgia. 7.6.1921 - 7.21.1921 N. Tcheidze, M. Tskhakia, N. Jordania, R.
Macdonald, L. De Brouckere, Troulstra, Stowning, Albin Nansen

18. From the archive of Political
Commission in Constantinople. The question of Georgia on the agenda of third
assembly of the League of Nations. Letters in cipher. 9.22.1922 - 9.5.1923 L. De Brouckere, R. Cecil, Moffa, D. Nansen, J. London, Fr. Branting, N. Jordania

20. Miscellaneous correspondence
among the Social Democratic organizations in European countries as well as
among members of the party. About Prague Association. 10.2.1923 - 4.23.1925 N. Jordania, G. Eradze, N. Ramishvili, K. Kaudelaki, V. Rathenau, R.
Poincare, B. Mussolini

50. Two different trends about the
way of political activity of the social democratic party abroad. 5.14.1927 -
4.17.1929 N. Jordania, Fr. Adler, I. Tsereteli, A.
Tchenkeli, N. Ramishvili, K. Gvardjaladse

5. Letter to the Vienna International
about founding in occupied Georgia of the Independent Social Democratic Group
under the name "Akhali Skhivi"-"New Light." 4.6.1921 G. Giorgadze, K. Ninidze, N. Imnaishvili

9. Report to the Congress of Second
International about the activity of Georgian Social Democratic Party underground
in Georgia. 1921-1922 - January 1937 N. Jordania, J. Stalin, V. Lenin, Ph. Makharadze, K. Gvardjaladze

16. Different points of view inside the
Second International about a war against Soviet Union. Disagreement about this
question between Georgian and Russian social democrats. 3.18.1938 - August
1936 N. Jordania, Fr. Adler, L. De Brouckere, C.
Huysmans, K. Gvardjaladze, L. Beria, A. Briand, E. Gueguechkori, J. Stalin

18. History of the Georgian Social
Democratic Party under the Tsars' regime and after the Great Russian Revolution.
The true visage of Bolshevism. 11.21.1939 J. Stalin, A. Hitler, N. Jordania, R. Arsenidze, N. Ramishvili, E. Gueguechkori, A.
Lomtatidze, V. Tsuladze

6. Diplomatic correspondence of the
Independent Georgian Government with the League of Nations, Second
International and European Allied Forces 8.25.1920 - September 1920 Sir Eric Drummond, N. Jordania, N. Tcheidze, I. Tsereteli, N. Ramishvili, E.
Gueguechkori

9. Diplomatic correspondence of the
Independent Georgian Government with the League of Nations. Transport
Convention. 12.20.1920 - 12.28.1920 Sir Eric Drummond, N. Tcheidze

10. Appeal of the Committee for
Independence of Georgia to the League of Nations. Rejection by League of the
petition of Georgia. 12.20.1920 - 9.10.1923 Sir Eric Drummond, Dr. Nansen, N.
Tcheidze, Lord Robert Cecil, R. Viviani, Shanzer, Fisher, K. Sabakhtarishvili, A. Tchenkeli, E.
Gueguechkori

11. Appeals of the Independent
Georgian Government to the League of Nations and to European States as well as
to South Africa, Colombia, Bolivia, Argentina, Paraguay, Persia. 12.23.1920 -
1924 E. Gieguechkori, A. Briand, A. Milleraud, P.
Renaudel, R. Poincare, E. Herriot, R. Massigli, G. Tchicherin, L. Barthon, Paul Boncour

12. Information about situation in the
country immediately after occupation. Information about the political and
economical situation in Europe. Both reports from the country and to the country
are sent by Georgian socialist federalists underground and abroad. August 1921 N. Jordania, G. Laskhishvili, Gr. Veshapeli, S.
Mdivani, J. Stalin, Ph.
Makhanadze, B. Mdivani, Sh. Nutsubidze, Th. Glonti

13. External Appeals of the Georgian
exiled government to the peoples of the world. Appeal of the Georgian workers to
the workers of Europe and America and of the Georgian students to the students of
the world. Georgian bolshevik's reply to Ramsay Macdonald. 9.4.1921 - 5.6.1922 N. Jordania, G. Tchicheria, N. Tcheidze, R. Macdonald, Krassin, Dzadzamia, Ph. Sharadze, I. Khevsuriani, E. Vandervelde, P. Renaudel, L. De
Brouckere, K. Kautski, S. Mdivani

18. Situation in occupied Georgia
related by the eyewitness. Negotiations among the underground political parties
to create a common front against bolsheviks. 11.19.1921 I.
Kartsivadze, Th. Glonti, Sh. Nutsubidze

26. External Decree about adoption
by the Georgian people of the Russian troops who are present in Georgia. Appeal
of the Georgian workers and political prisoners to the Amsterdam Professional
Union. Uprising in Svanethi. Proclamation of the Russians and Jews living in
Georgia. 3.15.1922 - 12.29.1922 Narimanoff, Miasnikoff, B. Mdivani, L. Trotskii, L. Natadze, Enver Pasha, N. Jordania, I. Ramishvili, G.
Laskhishvili, Gr. Giorgadze, N. Tchigogidze, S. Gompers

32. Place of general uprising in
Georgia and the whole Caucasus. Information about Russian and Turk military
forces in Caucasus. 5.7.1922 - 6.10.1922 Kemal Pasha, V. Djugeli, S. Shamil, K. Gvardjaladze

34. Punitive expeditions almost in
every village and town of Georgia. Persecution and torture of the political
opponents. Report about military forces. 6.7.1923 - 9.21.1923 N.
Ramishvili, N. Jordania, I. Tsereteli

38. External Appeal of he Georgian
Social Democratic Party underground to the Second International. German Social
Democratic Party and to the "Vorwarts" editorial board. 10.27.1922 - 8.5.1925 K. Andronikashvili, Sturua

44. External Correspondence between
the underground Georgia and exiled government. Letter of the Georgian political
prisoners and hostages from the monastery prison of the special camp of G.P.U. in
the city of Suzdal to Maksim Gorki, simultaneously
directed also to the famous writers, banner-bearers of the conscience, humanism
and civilization - An. France, Rom.
Rolland, G. Wells, Y.
Sinclair and G. Brandes. 1.30.1923 -
7.5.1923 N. Jordania, Gr.
Lordkipanidze, S. Ordjonikidze, M. Orakhelashvili, Miasmkian, G. Plekhanoff

46. External Appeal of the Georgian
National front underground to the League of Nations. Repressions, exile of the
political opponents to the Russian camps. Executions. Appeal of Socialist
Democratic Party to the Conference of United Internationals. 3.5.1923 -
1.14.1924 N. Jordania, E.
Gueguechkori, I. Tsereteli, N. Khomeriki, S. Devdariani, V. Tevzaia, V. Djugeli, A. Salukvadze

47. Memoir of the old bolshevik
about his terroristic activity in the time of Tsar's regime. 1923 - 1924 K. Tsintsadze, Kamo Petrosian

60. Information from the occupied
Georgia. Arrests, exdcutions. About the position of the Second International.
4.4.1930 - 10.15.1930 N. Jordania, I.
Tsereteli, S. Devdariani

61. External History of the coming
into being of the Russian bolshevism. Articles about the situation of Caucasus,
Turkey and Europe. Appeal to the Second International. 12.7.1931 - 1.12.1939 N. Jordania, V. Lenin, E. Vandervelde, S. Mdivani

2. Letter to the State Department by
the Georgian Representative. Interview of the "New York Times" with Georgian Representative. 12.6.1921 - 2.1.1922 Hon. Sen.
Chandler, L. Avalishvili

3. Joint memorandum of the
Representatives of Caucasus and Ukraine to the League of Nations. Joint
resolution of the U.S.A. Congress about recognition of the Georgian exiled
Government and appointment of a diplomatic representative to this government.
August 1924 - 3.11.1926 Sen. Copeland, N. Pamishvili, J. Salakaia, A. Khatissian, A.
Tchenkeli, A. Tchermoeff, A. Toptchibasheff, A. Livitzki, V. Akhmeteli

10. Death of the President of the
Georgian Democratic Republic. Bulletin of the Bureau of the Coordination
Centre. Statement For the Opening of the Georgian Broadcasts. 5.26.1951 -
November 1953 St. Wytwytsky, E.
Gueguechkori, Adm. L. Stevens, Dean Acheson

Reel 193

11. Parisian Bloc and
the American Committee. Memorandum on the liquidation of the
Chechen-Logush-Karachaj-Crimea Republics and the banishment of its population
to Siberia. 8.29.1953 - 7.20.1955 Dj. Nehru, Adm. L. Stevens, E. Gueguechkori

Series: Idea of confederation of the Caucasus among the
representatives of the Caucasian Republics in exile: Box 76

1. Conferences of the representatives of
the Northern Caucacus in Tbilissi and Baku and creation of Medjlis. The appeals
of the Medjlis to all the peoples of Caucasus. July 1919 - 10.6.1919 Akhmed Tsalikoff, V. Djabagi, A. Kawtomir, V. Djugeli, A. Tchermoeff, Gen.
Denikin

19. Caucasian Confederation.
Question of the Caucasus and Russia. Minutes about the working out of the
program for the "Union of Promethean Peoples." 10.12.1934 - 1.16.1937 A. Toptchibasheff, S. Mdivani, A. Tchenkeli, N.
Jordania, Girej Sursh, E.
Gueguechkori, A. Khatissian

6. Letters to the Central
Committee of Social Democratic Party in Georgia (underground)
and to the members of exiled government about general uprising in Georgia.
1.15.1923 - 1.2.1925 A. Tchenkeli, K.
Kandelaki, K. Gvardjaladze, N. Tcheidze, N. Ramishvili, K. Sabakhtarishvili, J.
Gobechia, S. Pirtskhalava, R. Arsenidze

Reel 196

7. Materials for the articles. Excerpts
and short reviews of the various civilizations according to the renown historians
and sociologists. 2.18.1923

8. Drafts for articles about the
methods of fight for Georgia and Caucasus. Georgia and Europe. Letter to the
Bureau of Social Democratic Party abroad. 5.12.1923

9. Diary of President N.
Jordania in sixteen notebooks. 1923 - 1941

Reel 197

10. Materials for the articles about
true and false communism, about democracy, etc. 8.18.1924

11. Letters to therrepresentatives of
the Georgian National Government in exile. 2.16.1925 - 2.8.1926 K. Gvardjaladze, Kh. Ihavishvili, J. Salakaia

23. Noe Jordania's opinion about Social Democratic Party program, about literary and
social activity of Ilia Czavczavadze, about state
structure, about national problem and internationalism, about youth and racism,
etc. 11.2.1932 - September 1933

29. Beginning and completion but
still published book under the title "Today - Tomorrow." 2.1.1941
- 9.20.1941 Final reduction 8.4.1944

30. Written but still not published
book entitled "Europe and Mankind." 2.1.1943 - 2.20.1943 Final
reduction 8.6.1944

31. Completion of a book entitled "Shotha Rusthaveli and Hellenic Philosophy." 6.10.1943

32. Draft for a booklet entitled "What is happening in the World?" The inevitability of the third
war because of the goal of the Bolshevik Russia to dominate the whole world.
9.6.1946 - 9.14.1946 Final editorial reduction 12.1.1946

33. Exemplar of the published book
mentioned above "Europe and Mankind." 9.5.1947

34. Printed book entitled "Our
Way." Conflict of interests between Orient and Occident. Controversies
in the social and economic structures of the old and new civilizations. Question of
industrialization, etc. 9.20.1941 - March 1948

35. Private correspondence of President Noe Jordania.

Reel 199

36. Reminiscences of the past
political life, meetings on the Socialist Conferences with Lenin, Plekhanoff, Akselrod, etc. Excerpts from the historic-economic-political books.

37. Noe Jordania's book about the history, development and character of "The
Bolshevism" published in 1920's but here indicating no date. (Two
exemplars) V. Lenin, L. Trotskii

Series: Private and official correspondence, speeches and articles by
K. Gvardjaladze and D. Iharashidze: Box 79

22. What must be done in order to
liberate Georgia from the Russian domination 10.7.1921

23. Miscellanea 10.8.1921-6.15.1951

24. Question of the just distribution of
the American Near East Relief among the Georgian population. The right status
of the Georgian Jews during occupation of France by the Germans
12.2.1921-1.15.1942 A. Tchenkeli, E.
Gueguechkori, G. Leygues, K. Gvardjaladze, De Brinon, Sabakhtarishvili